Those warning of a moribund web seem to believe it is set on a path of terminal decline, with apps gradually eroding more and more of what was once the preserve of the browser.

But to presume the shift is irreversible is to assume the web platform is fixed - when it most certainly is not. What's more, much of the time spent in these native apps is devoted to viewing web content via an in-app browser, for example browsing links in Facebook's iPhone app.

The web has moved a long way from serving static documents and as it continues to evolve an increasing number of applications that were once the domain of native software now run in the browser.

The most recent demonstration of the web's growing capabilities was Microsoft's pledge to offer Skype in the browser, built around Microsoft's Object RTC spec.

These technologies aren't years away. All these standards are either supported or in the process of being implemented in most major browsers and are only a selection of the far wider range of technologies being introduced to the web.

And web technologies have an advantage over native apps, as once they are established in major browsers they generally will be based on the same standards, guaranteeing compatibility between disparate web services. No more worrying about Apple FaceTime not being able to talk to Skype. That ease of use will always be a big win in the eyes of the end user.

The web's shrinking sphere of influence is often characterised as death by 1,000 cuts, with each new app nibbling away at a service that used to be provided in the browser.

But just as apps can erode the web, so browsers are more than capable of snatching responsibilities from apps. Look at how Gmail in the browser has replaced the email client for many.

And, to an extent, casting the web and native apps as opposing forces bent on each other's destruction is wrongheaded. Without the web, native apps would lose much of the linked content that gives them their appeal in the first place. Rather than characterise their relationship as antagonistic, you could just as easily see it as symbiotic.

The web is about to become a lot more capable. While you might be right to harbour doubts about the prospects for today's web, you shouldn't discount tomorrow's.